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Here’s What’s Really Going on in Your Toddler’s Brain, According to Science

BY LINDSAY CHAMPION

It’s a well-known fact that toddlers are total maniacs. One minute, you’re snuggling together reading Corduroy, and the next she’s angrily demanding a bowl of ketchup for dinner instead of the chicken cacciatore you spent an hour preparing. With all of the rapid brain development happening inside those cute little heads, it’s no wonder that life with a toddler can be a wild ride. Luckily, child psychologists and early childhood specialists have learned quite a bit about the toddler brain to help us hang on (and maybe even enjoy their quirks a little) until they reach Kindergarten. Here’s what we know about the weird and wonderful minds of kids ages 1 to 3, including why they remember everything, steal your phone and need the green cup now.

Their Memory Is Better Than Yours (Sometimes)

Remember that annoying battery-powered robot your in-laws bought that wouldn’t stop beeping, so you chucked it in the trash as soon as they left last Christmas? Your toddler does. And he will continue to ask what happened to it every weekend for the next two years. That’s because toddlers’ memory retention is surprisingly excellent—in a study conducted by Emory University in the ‘90s, psychologists studied a group of three year olds who went to Disney World with their families. Most of the toddlers were able to recount even small details about the trip 18 months later. (But really, who could forget the words to “It’s a Small World?”) On the other hand, toddlers’ working memory, which allows them to maintain a train of thought, needs some work. “If you’ve given your child what feels like a reasonable set of instructions, but they keep getting off track, it’s a good sign they’ve reached the limits of their working memory,” notes Rae Jacobson of the Child Mind Institute. And if you have a toddler, it’s probably no surprise that asking him to go to his room and grab his pajamas from the dresser will result in a toddler sitting on the floor of his room, surrounded by Legos. “Sweetie, where are your PJs?” “Huh?” Rest assured, it’s normal and his working memory will improve with age, so don’t sweat it.

…But Their Brains Are Also Designed to Forget

Think of your earliest childhood memory. You were about 3 or 4, right? That’s thanks to childhood amnesia, a term coined by psychologist Caroline Miles in the late 1800s. While toddlers can easily remember their pre-verbal lives as babies, as time goes on, they actually begin to recall those memories as having happened years later, a 2016 study published in Frontiers in Psychology suggests. Then, as adults, everything gets fuzzier, eventually becoming only a few faint memories from early childhood. Guess your kiddos will just have to rely on mom to supply the stories (and embarrassing photos) when they’re adults.

“If a toddler develops secure attachments throughout their childhood with kind, nurturing adults that love them, they will learn to love and respect others the same way.”

“If a toddler develops secure attachments throughout their childhood with kind, nurturing adults that love them, they will learn to love and respect others the same way.”

Tantrums Are Totally Normal (and Healthy)

Your toddler wanted the blue fork, but you gave her the green fork. A tantrum ensues. As parents, we sometimes feel like we’re in The Twilight Zone (namely, that episode where that five-year-old mindreading kid terrorizes the entire town), but these seemingly irrational meltdowns are actually completely normal behavior for the under-four set. A child’s limbic system is the brain’s emotional center, explains early childhood educator and developmental specialist Allana Robinson. “Our amygdala, which is the part of our limbic system that monitors our environment for danger—is growing super fast so it’s really overly sensitive [in toddlers and young children],” she says. If the amygdala is sensing danger, a toddler will go into a fight or flight response, which can be very difficult to snap out of once it is triggered. And even though your child isn't in any actual danger (see: green fork incident), a lack of control, feelings of discomfort and limited language skills to communicate their needs can easily send them into this spiral. While you’ll

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